Click the star to add/remove an item to/from your individual schedule.
You need to be logged in to avail of this functionality.

Accepted Paper:

Formats, standards, and infrastructures: Digital media and the digitalization of cultural consumption  
Paolo Magaudda (University of Padova)

Paper long abstract:

The presentation will develop a discussion on some concepts coming from STS and media studies, only marginally considered together in the study of media and culture: the concepts of "formats", "standards" and "infrastructures". These notions, with their different origins and applications, will be discussed to address questions related with the process of digitalization of cultural consumption, with specific reference to the circulation of digital music and ebooks. The concepts of "standard" and "infrastructure" have a robust tradition in STS (i.e. Star & Ruhleder, 1996), but this work has not been embraced in media studies, even if both these terms are commonly used in general ways to discuss media and communication. The notion of "format" and its relevance to understand media have been recognized only recently as extremely relevant in media studies, following the work of Jonathan Sterne (2012) on the creation of mp3. Sterne's work, which can be rightly considered an STS-informed historical approach to digital media, has highlighted the need to develop further media studies to consider the hidden dimension implicit in digital media standard and infrastructures. The presentation will discuss these concepts and their reciprocal connections to develop potential intersections between STS and media studies, also illustrating these ideas with empirical examples regarding the process of digitalization of consumption practices of music and books.

Star & Ruhleder (1996). Steps toward an ecology of infrastructure: Design and access for large information spaces. Information Systems Research, 7(1), 111-134.

Sterne (2012) MP3. The meaning of a format, Duke University Press.

Panel A6
STS and media studies: Empirical and conceptual encounters?
  Session 1 Wednesday 17 September, 2014, -